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Examples
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Do any of the "26 million U.S. voters, including the City of Chicago and Cook County, Illinois, the State of Louisiana, the State of Nevada and the majority of counties in California," who use Sequoia's systems, according to the Dominion announcement, know about it?
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Readers of The BRAD BLOG may remember the woeful Smith as the one who'd first sent threat letters to Princeton computer scientists, promising legal action if they independently reviewed Sequoia's voting machines after the systems had been found to have miscounted in a New Jersey election.
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We subsequently detailed how Blaine had utterly dissembled on that point, in writing, while under very specific questioning about it from one of Sequoia's largest clients, the City of Chicago and Cook County, Illinois.
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Meanwhile, last year Dominion had already hired away Sequoia's VP Edwin Smith.
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If you believe Dominion's press release, which states "Dominion has acquired Sequoia's inventory and all intellectual property", that would be Dominion.
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Sequoia hadn't publicly disclosed that Smartmatic still retained legal ownership of the IP used in all of their voting machines, a fact that wasn't publicly revealed until our exposé which forced a subsequent admission by Sequoia's then CEO and President Jack Blaine.
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In words and deeds, Sequoia's managers go their own way.
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Sequoia's co-manager, said that an investment in Porsche Automobil Holding SE "has been a disaster" thanks to a decision to merge with Volkswagen AG that he also called a "disaster" created by Porsche's management.
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P 500 earlier this year, Sequoia's managers believe the stock isn't as inexpensive as it used to be.
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As long time readers of The BRAD BLOG will recall, the matter of the true ownership of the intellectual property (IP) of Sequoia's voting systems wasn't at all what the company had represented to the public, to media, to election official customers, and even in courts of law.
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